%0 Journal Article %T The Many (Subtle) Ways Parents Game the System: Mixed %A Denise Klinge %A Hanna Dumont %A Kai Maaz %J Sociology of Education %@ 1939-8573 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/0038040719838223 %X We analyze the subtle mechanisms at work in the interaction between families and schools that underlie social inequalities at the transition point from elementary school into secondary-school tracks in Berlin, Germany. We do so by combining quantitative data from a large-scale survey and assessment study (N = 3,935 students and their parents) with qualitative data from in-depth interviews with parents (N = 25) collected during the 2010¨C11, 2011¨C12, and 2012¨C13 school years. The quantitative analyses show that students from high¨Csocioeconomic status (SES) families were more likely to enter the academic track than were students from low-SES families, even if they performed equally well on a standardized achievement test, had the same grades in school, and received the same track recommendation from their teachers. The qualitative analyses illustrate the many ways in which parents intervene during the transition process, with high-SES parents having particularly effective ways of getting what they want for their children %K tracking %K class inequality %K school/parent relationships %K parental cultural capital %K social capital %K international education %K mixed methods %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0038040719838223